Dictation by Cynthia Ozick: Book Cover

    Dictation: A Quartet by Cynthia Ozick

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    (Hardcover)

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    • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Company
    • Pub. Date: April 2008
    • ISBN-13: 9780547054001
    • Sales Rank: 33,542
    • 178pp
     
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    The Barnes & Noble Review

    "History," wrote Henry James in a 1910 letter to his amanuensis Theodora Bosanquet, "is strangely written." This casual aside could easily serve as the epigraph of Cynthia Ozick's superb Dictation, which concerns itself with lost worlds evoked by languages -- languages that separate and obscure as readily as they bind. It can be risky to look for connective tissue between stories written years apart and published in magazines ranging from The Conradian to The New Yorker. But themes of deception, posterity, and, above all, the glory of language -- at once malleable and intractable -- knit together this quartet, recasting the whole as the harmonious product of Ozick's formidable talent.

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    Synopsis

    Four stories of comedy, deception, and revenge, including one previously unpublished, from the acclaimed author of Heir to the Glimmering World.

    Cynthia Ozick's new work of fiction brings together four long stories, including the novella-length "Dictation," that showcase this incomparable writer's sly humor and piercing insight into the human heart. Each starts in the comic mode, with heroes who suffer from willful self-deceit. These not-so-innocents proceed from self-deception to deceiving others, who do not take it lightly. Revenge is the consequence—and for the reader, a delicious, if dark, recognition of emotional truth.

    The glorious new novella "Dictation" imagines a fateful meeting between the secretaries to Henry James and Joseph Conrad at the peak of their fame. Timid Miss Hallowes, who types for Conrad, comes under the influence of James's Miss Bosanquet, high-spirited, flirtatious, and scheming. In a masterstroke of genius, Ozick hatches a plot between them to insert themselves into posterity.

    Ozick is at her most devious, delightful best in these four works, illuminating the ease with which comedy can glide into calamity.

    The New York Times - Christopher Benfey

    In "What Happened to the Baby?"…Uncle Simon (the story is told from his niece's point of view) is the creator of "GNU, the future language of all mankind." Scornful of Esperanto and its creator, the "false messiah" Dr. Zamenhof, Simon wants to push his own universal language "beyond European roots." He has "traveled all over the world, picking up roots and discarding the less common vowels." He has also picked up girls, as his niece discovers. Gradually, she also learns the real reason for Simon's lifelong quarrel with Esperanto, and in doing so she comes to a realization about what unites us all as language-bearers. "Lie, illusion, deception," she asks herself—was that "truly, the universal language we all speak?" She might have given this all-encompassing language a different, more Jamesian name. Call it the "art of fiction," in which Cynthia Ozick, in Dictation: A Quartet, reveals herself a master.

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    Biography

    Cynthia Ozick is the author of over a dozen acclaimed works of fiction and nonfiction. She is a recipient of the National Book Critics Circle Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Her most recent collection of essays, The Din in the Head, was a Los Angeles Times Favorite Book of the Year and a New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice. Ozick's work has been translated into thirteen languages worldwide.

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